Menstrual Cup Comparison Tool (4 Cups From 1 Brands)

Menstrual cups come in all types of styles, sizes, materials, colors, and assorted options that can have you overwhelmed at the little details. Although some menstrual cups may work for all, others may not work for some and vice-verse. Each cup boasts a unique style, options, design, and features that make experiencing them different for women.

We tried our best to deliver the most accurate and up-to-date information on the different menstrual cups, but we cannot guaranty the information is 100% accurate. Find any errors? Looking for a brand or model which isn’t featured here? Want to send us your cup for review and listing? Let us know!

In order to provide you with the easiest perspectives in menstrual cup specs and details for our reviewed brands of menstrual cups, we have composed a simple table that lists all brands and cups with the associated information. This provides a break-down for you to easily see the exact specifications that each brand features so you can better select the exactly perfect menstrual cup for you.

We tried our best to deliver the most accurate and up-to-date information on the different menstrual cups, but we cannot guaranty the information is 100% accurate. Find any errors? Looking for a brand or model which isn’t featured here? Want to send us your cup for review and listing? Let us know!

I am a little bit confused as the website i looked at to buy my Athena cup states that it has a 65mm cup length, excluding stem and you have it listed at 54mm.
I find the Athena too long and am now worried about trying another brand as you list Athena as one of the shortest. Please help. 😖

hey i am from India and people her have just started using menstrual cup but no its only amazon who is selling it and there are very few brands i don’t know what to choose there are very few brands selling it
should i buy a expensive one. Is it like the expensive one has good quality
should i use silicon or rubber material

If you have a low cervix, these might work well for you: Lena Cup small, Sckoon, SochCup small, Super Jennie small, StoneSoup Wings Cup, Nari-Yari, LaliCup medium or small, or the Juju Model 1.

If you have a high cervix, I would check into the Diva Cup, Juju model 2, MeLuna large or XL, Lunette, Silky Cup, SheCup, Rustic Art, LaliCup medium or large, Boondh, SochCup large or the V Cup.

I have a few friends in India (SochGreen and Hygiene and You) that have workshops about reusable menstrual products and carry or offer these cups. Some of the cups are only sold in Inida 🙂

Just because a cup is more expensive, doesn’t mean it’s better quality. Read reviews about the specific cup that you’re interested in to see what others say about it.

As for choosing silicone or another material, it depends on if you have any allergies. You might also choose a material based on how well it opens or keeps it’s shape. A majority of the cups out there are made of silicone. Silicone seems to have a better ‘spring’ than TPE (MeLuna cups are TPE) and may make them easier to open. Most silicone will also keep it’s circlular shape while the rim of TPE cups tend to stay oval.
If you have rubber allergies, avoid the Keeper Cup. The rest shouldn’t give you any problems.

I ordered the Jennie in a large and the femmy cycle 2 box. I was in the search for a larger menstrual cup because my keeper moon cup filled wasn’t big enough for me. Thank you so much for the size guide!

So far I am thrilled with the capacity of the super Jennie. I wore it during the heaviest part of my period, all day, and it didn’t even reach the halfway point. I could probably wear this 24 hrs straight easily.

Thank you so much for creating this resource! I have so many clients asking for a break down of different cups and what would work best for them per individual anatomic needs. This is fantastic! Thank you.